Friday Reads: Mobituaries: Great Lives Worth Reliving by Mo Rocca

Mo Rocca is a multi-talented actor,
humorist, and journalist on various radio and television programs. I became a
fan listening to him on National Public Radio’s Quiz Show – Wait Wait… Don’t Tell Me! and watching
him on CBS Sunday Morning. Because Mo
is the narrator, I knew I would not be disappointed with this audiobook.

A Mobituary, as Rocca defines it, is
“an appreciation for someone who didn’t get the love she or he deserved the
first time around.” What I particularly loved about this book is that Mo’s
cultural points of reference often parallel mine. A good example was the love shown for Audrey
Hepburn who died the day of Bill Clinton’s inauguration in 1993. Hepburn’s
younger son, Luca Dotti, explained, “his mother suffered from severe
malnourishment at the end of World War II, weighing only 88 pounds… the stress
of the war stayed with his mother the rest of her life, but she hid it well. My
mother was then a survivor … you always have this duality – you are happy to be
alive, but you have this sense of guilt because the person next door didn’t
make it.” Hepburn’s older son Sean
Ferrer, explained: “I think that this is one of the reasons why she wanted
to do the UNICEF work, is that she remembered so vividly herself and her
emotions as a little girl and living through the war.”

This book sheds light on many other celebrities, politicians, landmarks, trends, and trees. While not nearly as much in love with Barbra Streisand as Mo, (a very alive Streisand is included in the Fanny Brice chapter), I laughed out loud listening to Mo’s ruminations on both women. I had no idea Herbert Hoover saved Europe during WWI from starvation using his engineering abilities before he became a US President. Also laudable are the Mobituaries on the historic figures memorialized by rest stops on the New Jersey Turnpike, the death of several fashion trends, and the loss of Auburn University’s famed oak trees. Mo completes his book with a Mobituary on his father Marcel (1929-2004) who resumed his teenage trumpet playing at age 50 in the cellar of their home. It was because of his father that Mo learned to love obituaries. A fitting end to an excellent collection of remembrances. https://www.mobituaries.com/